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Table 2. Doctor interruptions.
"... In PAGE 3: ... In total they were interrupted at a rate of 18.6 interruptions per 100 consultations (4,030 times) ( Table2 ). Although interruptions before consultations were in a similar range to that of the nurses, the greatest difference between nurses and doctors was in the interruption rate during consultations.... ..."
Table 17. Doctorate holders by sex and country of origin
2007
"... In PAGE 5: ...able 16. Last five-year outputs of doctorate holders working as researchers in the United States..... 21 Table17 .... In PAGE 22: ...The reason for this is that the foreign-born reflect the cumulative entries of immigrants into the country across the years, a part of whom has acquired the nationality/citizenship of the recipient country. We see from Table17 that the foreign contingent is very important in Switzerland both in terms of the foreign-born and the foreign citizens. Switzerland is also known for having the highest share of foreign-born doctoral students among OECD countries.... ..."
Table 11. Percentage of men and women in post-doctoral positions by field of doctoral degree Portugal, 2000-2004 doctoral awardees
2007
"... In PAGE 5: ...able 10. Employed doctorate holders by occupation.......................................................................... 17 Table11 .... In PAGE 17: ... In Portugal, up to 90% of recent doctorate holders are active in research, 85% of whom work in the higher education sector. A look at the distribution of post-doctoral positions reveals that women are more likely to hold such positions than men in all doctoral degree fields except humanities ( Table11 ). This ... In PAGE 36: ... 36 Annex Table11 . Number of doctorate holders by sex and country of origin (thousands) TOTAL Citizens of the reporting country Of which by birth Of which by naturalisation Foreign citizens TOTAL Born in the reporting country Foreign born Unknown Argentina 2005 Men 4.... ..."
Table 22. Place of doctoral degree award by citizenship
2007
"... In PAGE 5: ...able 21. Percentage of foreign doctorate holders by region of birth .................................................. 24 Table22 .... In PAGE 25: ...DSTI/DOC(2007)2 25 Table22 , on where doctoral degrees are awarded, shows different patterns across countries. First, the share of citizens of the three reporting countries having received their doctorate abroad varies greatly.... ..."
Table 3: Doctor Example Role Job Workpatterns
"... In PAGE 40: ... 3.4 Model Example Before I present RPAM01, I consider a design example (See Table3 .): Mary, in the role of a doctor, is caring for her patient at the hospital.... ..."
Table 2. Sex breakdown of doctorate holders
2007
"... In PAGE 4: ...able 1. Number of doctorate holders in the population ........................................................................ 8 Table2 .... In PAGE 8: ... The balance is a bit better in the United States and Germany than it is in Australia and especially Canada and Switzerland. The situation is also improving over time, as can be seen from the two countries (Canada and the United States) that have reported data with an interval of some years ( Table2 ). This improvement can be attributed to a catching-up phenomenon when looking at the age structure of doctorate holders: except for Argentina, women are in all cases younger than men (Figures 1 to 8).... In PAGE 23: ... In the United States, as well as in Canada and in Australia, the two main regions of origin are Asia and Europe. If we compare the numbers in terms of place of birth and citizenship ( Table2 0), we see that, in the United States, doctorate holders born in Asia are more than 2.5 times higher ... In PAGE 24: ...6 2003 1993 1993-2003 growth rate (%) Source: First OECD/Eurostat/UIS data collection on careers of doctorate holders. Conversely to the situation in the United States, the percentage of European Union-born doctorate holders (41%) in Australia is higher than the Asian-born (27%) ( Table2 1). Table 21.... In PAGE 25: ...DSTI/DOC(2007)2 25 Table2 2, on where doctoral degrees are awarded, shows different patterns across countries. First, the share of citizens of the three reporting countries having received their doctorate abroad varies greatly.... In PAGE 31: ...DSTI/DOC(2007)2 31 Annex Table2 . First OECD/Eurostat/UIS data collection on careers of doctorate holders: data sources Argentina Australia Canada Germany Italy Portugal Switzerland United States Table P1.... ..."
Table 8: Services Through Primary HMO Doctor
"... In PAGE 18: ...The great majority of beneficiaries believed they received the Medicare services they needed; however, disenrollees were more likely than enrollees to perceive problems with access to primary and specialty care. In 1996, a large majority of enrollees and disenrollees believed their primary HMO doctors provided the necessary care (see Table8 ). Their responses consistently indicated good access to Medicare covered services, hospital admission and specialty care.... ..."
Table 1: Computation of similarity for doctor and nurse
"... In PAGE 4: ...#29 By Equation 2, wemust consider all pairs of concepts hc 1 ;c 2 i, where c 1 2fdoctor1; doctor2g and c 2 2fnurse1; nurse2g, and for each such pair wemust compute the semantic similarity sim#28c 1 ,c 2 #29 according to Equation 1. Table1 illustrates the computation.... In PAGE 23: ...7 Table 9: Evaluation using Judge 1 as the reference standard, considering items selected with con#0Cdence 3 and above. Judge 2 Algorithm Random Include Exclude Include Exclude Include Exclude Judge 1 Include 40 32 58 25 26 57 Exclude 33 363 99 380 61 418 Table1 0: Agreement and disagreement with Judge 1 Table 9 shows the precision#2Frecall #0Cgures using the judgments of Judge 1, the native Chinese speaker, as a reference standard, considering only known items selected with con- #0Cdence 3 and above. 18 The algorithm recorded all 100 items as known, and its con#0Cdence values were scaled linearly from continuous values in range #5B0,1#5D to discrete values from 1 to 5.... In PAGE 28: ... Leacock and Chodorowhave experimented with this measure and the information content measure described here in the context of word sense disambiguation, and found that they yield roughly similar results. Implementing their method and testing it on the task reported in Section 3, I found that it actually outperformed the information-based measure slightly on that data set; however, in a follow-up experiment using a di#0Berent and larger set of noun pairs #28100 items#29, the information-based measure performed signi#0Ccantly better #28 Table1 1#29. Analyzing the di#0Berences between the two studies is illuminating.... In PAGE 29: ...Similarity method Correlation Information content r = :6894 Leacock and Chodorow r = :4320 Edge-counting r = :4101 Table1 1: Summary of experimental results in follow-up study. #28to ensure that similar noun pairs occurred#29 and then selected noun pairings at random #28in order to avoid biasing the follow-up study in favor of either algorithm#29.... In PAGE 30: ...Similarity method Correlation Information content r = :7947 sim Wu amp;Palmer r = :8027 sim Lin r = :8339 Table1 2: Summary of Lin apos;s results comparing alternative similarity measures into account not only commonalities but di#0Berences between the items being compared, expressing both in information-theoretic terms. Lin apos;s measure is theoretically well motivated and elegantly derived.... ..."
Table 10. Employed doctorate holders by occupation
2007
"... In PAGE 5: ...DSTI/DOC(2007)2 5 Table10 .... In PAGE 20: ... 20 their degree. Part of this population is probably the same as that identified in Table10 as employed in occupations below their qualifications. Table 15.... ..."
Table 1: Some Classes of Nurses and Doctors
"... In PAGE 4: ... There are obviously many different classes of these groups and a classification of possible speakers and hearers is necessary in order to be able to specify the speaker and hearer in a detailed way. Table1 shows some classes of... ..."
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